Week Ahead: Oil To Drop On OPEC+ Fallout; Wild Stock Swings Will Continue

 | Apr 05, 2020 22:08

  • Stocks expected to keep swinging violently as investors try to come to grips with how much of the slowing economy is priced in
  • Riyadh and Moscow at diplomatic stalemate, each blaming the other for the oil production crisis 
  • Weak economic data and extended social distancing guidelines, likely to be in place for longer than expected, all weighed on markets as trade on Friday concluded. U.S. and global equities retreated, pulling back from their strongest rebound in 11 years which was spurred by the most generous Congressional spending bill in U.S. history. The S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ each finished lower on the day by more than 1.5%.

    Ultimately however, it's the reality of the continuing spread of COVID-19, with more than 1,203,000 confirmed cases worldwide and almost 65,000 deaths globally at time of writing, and no vaccine or other cure in sight, that will continue to trigger risk appetite—or the lack thereof—as investors consider the depth and breadth of both macro and micro economic damage the pandemic is creating across the globe. Expect continued volatility and perpetual whipsawing as long as the spread of coronavirus continues unabated. 

    h2 Unemployment, Oil Price Biggest Stories Of The Week/h2

    The U.S. jobs market is clearly taking a hit. After Thursdays staggering intial jobless claims print showed that more than 6.65 million American's had filed for unemployment benefits for the first time during the previous week (following the previous week's shocking 3million+ initial claims report), Friday's nonfarm payrolls release indicated that the U.S. economy had lost more than 700,000 jobs in March, lifting the country's unemployment rate from all-time lows. And unemployment will continue to rise, given that 10 million Americans have already filed for unemployment benefits in the last two weeks. Countries like Italy and the UK seemed to care more about the economy, but when they realized that if they have a population infected with a deadly virus, it will hit the economy, just the same, not to mention voters.

    The S&P 500 declined for the third day out of four on Friday fueled by the dire jobs data. The broad U.S. benchmark dropped 2.1% for the week, still holding most of the gains from the previous week, though the uptick was trimmed to 8% from 10.25%. Energy outperformed (+5.29%), tracking the oil market; Utilities lagged all other sectors (-6.99%).

    From a technical perspective, the SPX is trading within a rising flag, bearish after the 30% plunge, the speediest on record, that previously stopped the globalized market in its track.  The fact that it’s the fastest such plunge on record only packs in more of a punch into the pattern. Its downside breakout is thus expected to be even more explosive.

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